How To Win Friends and Influence People pdfdrive com


PRINCIPLE 2 Show respect for the other person’s opinions. Never say, ‘You’re wrong.’



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How To Win Friends and Influence People ( PDFDrive )

PRINCIPLE 2
Show respect for the other person’s opinions. Never say, ‘You’re wrong.’
1.
Adapted from Carl R. Rogers, 
On Becoming a Person
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1961), pp. 18ff.


WITHIN A MINUTE’S
walk of my house there was a wild stretch of virgin timber,
where the blackberry thickets foamed white in the springtime, where the
squirrels nested and reared their young, and the horse weeds grew as tall as a
horse’s head. This unspoiled woodland was called Forest Park – and it was a
forest, probably not much different in appearance from what it was when
Columbus discovered America. I frequently walked in this park with Rex, my
little Boston bulldog. He was a friendly, harmless little hound; and since we
rarely met anyone in the park, I took Rex along without a leash or a muzzle.
One day we encountered a mounted policeman in the park, a policeman
itching to show his authority.
‘What do you mean by letting that dog run loose in the park without a
muzzle and leash?’ he reprimanded me. ‘Don’t you know it’s against the law?’
‘Yes, I know it is,’ I replied softly, ‘but I didn’t think he would do any harm
out here.’
‘You didn’t think! You didn’t think! The law doesn’t give a tinker’s damn
about what you think. That dog might kill a squirrel or bite a child. Now, I’m
going to let you off this time; but if I catch this dog out here again without a
muzzle and a leash, you’ll have to tell it to the judge.’
I meekly promised to obey.
And I did obey – for a few times. But Rex didn’t like the muzzle, and
neither did I; so we decided to take a chance. Everything was lovely for a while,
and then we struck a snag. Rex and I raced over the brow of a hill one afternoon
and there, suddenly – to my dismay – I saw the majesty of the law, astride a bay
horse. Rex was out in front, heading straight for the officer.
I was in for it. I knew it. So I didn’t wait until the policeman started talking.
I beat him to it. I said: ‘Officer, you’ve caught me red-handed. I’m guilty. I have
no alibis, no excuses. You warned me last week that if I brought the dog out here
again without a muzzle you would fine me.’
‘Well, now,’ the policeman responded in a soft tone. ‘I know it’s a
temptation to let a little dog like that have a run out here when nobody is
around.’


‘Sure it’s a temptation,’ I replied, ‘but it is against the law.’
‘Well, a little dog like that isn’t going to harm anybody,’ the policeman
remonstrated.
‘No, but he may kill squirrels,’ I said.
‘Well now, I think you are taking this a bit too seriously,’ he told me. ‘I’ll
tell you what you do. You just let him run over the hill there where I can’t see
him – and we’ll forget all about it.’
That policeman, being human, wanted a feeling of importance; so when I
began to condemn myself, the only way he could nourish his self-esteem was to
take the magnanimous attitude of showing mercy.
But suppose I had tried to defend myself – well, did you ever argue with a
policeman?
But instead of breaking lances with him, I admitted that he was absolutely
right and I was absolutely wrong; I admitted it quickly, openly, and with
enthusiasm. The affair terminated graciously in my taking his side and his taking
my side. Lord Chesterfield himself could hardly have been more gracious than
this mounted policeman, who, only a week previously, had threatened to have
the law on me.
If we know we are going to be rebuked anyhow, isn’t it far better to beat the
other person to it and do it ourselves? Isn’t it much easier to listen to self-
criticism than to bear condemnation from alien lips?
Say about yourself all the derogatory things you know the other person is
thinking or wants to say or intends to say – and say them before that person has a
chance to say them. The chances are a hundred to one that a generous, forgiving
attitude will be taken and your mistakes will be minimised just as the mounted
policeman did with me and Rex.
Ferdinand E. Warren, a commercial artist, used this technique to win the
good will of a petulant, scolding buyer of art.
‘It is important, in making drawings for advertising and publishing
purposes, to be precise and very exact,’ Mr. Warren said as he told the story.
‘Some art editors demand that their commissions be executed immediately;
and in these cases, some slight error is liable to occur. I knew one art director in
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